Fantasia | |
---|---|
by Heitor Villa-Lobos | |
Catalogue | W. 490 |
Genre | Concertante |
Form | Fantasia |
Composed | 1948 Rio de Janeiro : |
Dedication | Marcel Mule |
Published | 1963 New York (reduction for saxophone and piano) : |
Publisher | Southern Music |
Recorded | April 1971 , Notre Dame du Liban, Paris. Eugene Rousseau, soprano saxophone; Paul Kuentz Chamber Orchestra; Paul Kuentz, cond. (issued 1972 on LP, Deutsche Grammophon 2530 209). |
Duration | 10 minutes |
Movements | 3 |
Scoring |
|
Premiere | |
Date | 17 November 1951 : |
Location | Auditório do Palácio de Cultura, Rio de Janeiro |
Conductor | Heitor Villa-Lobos |
Performers | Waldemar Szpilman , tenor saxophone; Orquestra de Câmara do Ministério da Educação e Cultura |
Fantasia for saxophone, three horns, and strings, W. 490, is a concertante work in three movements by the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, written in 1948. A performance of it lasts approximately ten minutes.
The saxophone features prominently throughout Villa-Lobos's compositional output. He discovered the saxophone in his youth, while playing in the street orchestras called "chorões". Amongst his friends in these circles was the saxophonist Anacleto de Medeiros and, as a clarinetist himself, Villa-Lobos occasionally performed on the saxophone also. As a composer, he frequently scored for the saxophone. In chamber music, the most important examples include the Sexteto místico for flute, oboe, alto saxophone, harp, guitar, and celesta (1917), Quarteto simbólico for flute, alto saxophone, harp, celesta and women's voices (1921), the Nonet (1923), Chôros No. 3 and No. 7 (1925 and 1924, respectively). [1] Orchestral compositions with prominent parts for the saxophone include Uirapuru , Bachianas Brasileiras No. 2 , Chôros No. 6 , No. 8 , No. 10 , No. 11 , and No. 12 , and the orchestral version of Rudepoêma . In his Fourth Symphony Villa-Lobos calls for a quartet of saxophones. [2] [3]
Villa-Lobos first got to know the saxophonist Marcel Mule in Paris in the 1920s, when Mule played the saxophone part in one of Villa-Lobos's orchestral works. They got on well and performed together again on several later occasions. [4] Villa-Lobos began composing the Fantasia in New York City in 1948 and completed it in Rio de Janeiro in November of the same year, as indicated on the first and last pages of the manuscript. [5] It was while Villa-Lobos was in the midst of composing this work that, in September 1948, he was diagnosed with bladder cancer and underwent surgery at the Sloan-Kettering Memorial Hospital in New York. [6] [7]
The Fantasia is Villa-Lobos's only composition featuring the saxophone as soloist, and amounts to a small concerto in three movements. Although it was written for and dedicated to Mule, and originally specified the soprano saxophone, the instrument with which Mule was primarily associated, the Fantasia was not a commissioned work and there is no indication that the composer corresponded with the saxophonist about the piece prior to sending him the completed score in December 1948. [1] Mule, however, never performed the work. Although he discussed it with several conductors, none of them were interested and Mule himself said, "Somehow the piece didn't excite me at that time". [4] Mule's lack of enthusiasm may have been partly because, in the original key of F major, the solo part extends into the altissimo register, with frequent occurrences of the (notated) high F♯ and G. Mule owned a Selmer Mark VI soprano saxophone, which does not have the keywork required to quickly and easily play in this extended range. [8] After receiving the score, Mule wrote to Villa-Lobos, observing that "the high F♯ and G are very difficult to play on the soprano."
In the face of Mule's disinclination to play the work, Villa-Lobos turned to the Brazilian saxophonist Waldemar Szpilman (bandleader and cousin of the pianist Władysław Szpilman, the central figure in Roman Polansky's film The Pianist ). [9] Szpilman, however, did not own a soprano saxophone, which was the instrument specified by Villa-Lobos, and, like Mule, found the highest notes too risky. Consequently, the composer decided to transpose the piece a tone lower, to E♭, and to permit the tenor saxophone as an alternative to the soprano. [3] It was during the transposition that a number of editing errors were introduced in the score. [1] The first performance took place on 17 November 1951 in the Auditório do Palacio da Cultura, Ministério da Educação e Cultura, Rio de Janeiro, with Waldemar Szpilman, tenor saxophone, and the Orquestra de Câmera do Ministério da Educação e Cultura, conducted by the composer. [10] Fifteen days after the premiere, Villa-Lobos's close friend, the pianist José Vieira Brandão , presented the composer with a piano reduction of the score. [11] However, the composer was not entirely satisfied with this version and recast it himself, adjusting chord voicing and correcting wrong notes. This second version of the piano reduction was published in 1963 by Southern Music Publishing/Peer International in New York. [12]
The first recording of the work was not made until 1971, by Eugene Rousseau, who reported that, at that time, it did not appear that the orchestral parts had ever been played. [13]
With the composer's authorization, the flautist Sebastião Vianna (1916–2009) made a version for flute and orchestra, transposed upward to G major. Although Vianna tried out this version in rehearsal in 1979 with the Chamber Orchestra of the Conservatório de Música da Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (where he taught flute), he never performed it publicly. In 2011 his former pupil, Fernando Pacífico Homem, announced his intention to premiere the flute version in the near future. [14]
The Fantasia is in three movements:
"Nationalistic musical elements of Brazil highlight this work, through the use of characteristic rhythmic figures, and through the use of certain melodic treatments". [15]
The first movement is characterised rhythmically by the use of polydivisions of the basic 3
2 metre. [16] Formally, it is cast in a pattern of ABCBC-coda: [1]
The second movement prominently displays an "altered Lydian-Mixolydian scale", with a major third, augmented fourth, minor sixth and minor seventh scale degrees: E♭–F–G–A–B♭–C♭–D♭–E♭. [17]
The finale is in tripartite (ABA) form, with the outer sections in 7
4 and the central section in 4
4. [18]
The saxophone is a type of single-reed woodwind instrument with a conical body, usually made of brass. As with all single-reed instruments, sound is produced when a reed on a mouthpiece vibrates to produce a sound wave inside the instrument's body. The pitch is controlled by opening and closing holes in the body to change the effective length of the tube. The holes are closed by leather pads attached to keys operated by the player. Saxophones are made in various sizes and are almost always treated as transposing instruments. Saxophone players are called saxophonists.
Heitor Villa-Lobos was a Brazilian composer, conductor, cellist, and classical guitarist described as "the single most significant creative figure in 20th-century Brazilian art music". Villa-Lobos has become the best-known South American composer of all time. A prolific composer, he wrote numerous orchestral, chamber, instrumental and vocal works, totaling over 2,000 works by his death in 1959. His music was influenced by both Brazilian folk music and stylistic elements from the European classical tradition, as exemplified by his Bachianas Brasileiras and his Chôros. His Etudes for classical guitar (1929) were dedicated to Andrés Segovia, while his 5 Preludes (1940) were dedicated to his spouse Arminda Neves d'Almeida, a.k.a. "Mindinha". Both are important works in the classical guitar repertory.
The Bachianas Brasileiras are a series of nine suites by the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, written for various combinations of instruments and voices between 1930 and 1945. They represent a fusion of Brazilian folk and popular music on the one hand and the style of Johann Sebastian Bach on the other, as an attempt to freely adapt a number of Baroque harmonic and contrapuntal procedures to Brazilian music. Most of the movements in each suite have two titles: one "Bachian", the other Brazilian.
Chôros is the title of a series of compositions by the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, composed between 1920 and 1929.
Roberto Ricardo Duarte is a Brazilian conductor, pianist, and musicologist, known particularly for his international promotion of Brazilian music.
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